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10th October 2025
05:25pm BST

Donald Trump has responded to losing out on winning the Nobel Peace Prize and there's only one reason he wanted to win it in the first place.
This morning (10 October), Venezuelan political activist María Corina Machado was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize "for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy".
It added that the Nobel Peace prize for 2025 goes to a "woman who keeps the flame of democracy going, amidst a growing darkness".
The committee awarded Machado the prize for being one of the most "extraordinary examples" of courage in Latin America in recent times.
Machado has been a key unifying figure, it added.
"This is precisely what lies at the heart of democracy, our shared willingness to defend the principles of popular rule, even though we disagree.
"At a time when democracy is under threat, it is more important than ever to defend this common ground."
Earlier today, Donald Trump broke his silence on not winning the award, taking to Truth Social to express his thoughts, doing so via his old pal Vladimir Putin.
Trump reposted a video of the Russian president talking about the Nobel Prize saying they had given the "prizes to underserving folk"
In a two-minute video he said: "These choice hurt the award's reputation.
"Someone showed up. Boom. For what? Did nothing. That's how it works.
"The prizes has lost credibility."
Trump then reposted this video with "Thank you to President Putin".
For those who haven't been religiously following the proceedings of the Nobel Peace Prize (most of us presumably), it is generally accepted there is only one real reason Trump wanted to win the prize in the first place, and his name is Barack Obama.
Obama became the fourth US president to win the award back in 2009, with Theodore Roosevelt (1906), Woodrow Wilson (1919), Jimmy Carter (2002) previously winning it.
The 44th president was given the award for “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples."
Speaking to The New York Times in March this year, John Bolton former National Security Adviser for Trump, claimed that the president “saw that Obama got the Nobel Peace Prize, and felt if Obama got it for not doing anything, why should he not get it?”
Trump's distain for Obama was visualised when he posted an AI video of the latter being put in prison, to the confusion of much of the watching world.
Speaking to MSNBC, former Republican National Committee chairman, Michael Steele explained how he thought Trump really feels about Obama.
He said: “It’s clear that Obama has been living in Trump’s head rent-free for the last two decades. Some think he first ran for president because Obama made fun of him at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner.
"He mistakenly called Biden by Obama’s name multiple times while campaigning, once even saying he beat Obama in 2016. He’s even claimed he is healthier than Obama.
“Obama wins the Nobel Peace Prize? Trump spends years obsessing about winning it himself. Obama passes a historic healthcare law? Trump makes it his top priority to overturn it.”
After the award, Jørgen Watne Frydnes, the Nobel Peace Committee's chairman, responded to pressure about Donald Trump being awarded the prize.
He was asked whether this pressure impacted the decision of the committee while choosing the winner.
Frydnes said that "in the long history" of the Nobel Peace Prize the committee has seen campaigns and "media tension" and it receives thousands of letters each year from people who say "what for them leads to peace".
"We base our decision only on the work and the will of Alfred Nobel," he concludes.
First established in 1895 and first awarded in 1901, the Nobel Peace Prize is one of the five awards established by the will of Swede Alfred Nobel, which rewards people and groups for progressing humanity.
The categories are in Peace, Chemistry, Physics, Physiology or Medicine, and Literature.
Cambodia nominated Trump "for his crucial role in restoring peace and stability at the border between Thailand and Cambodia".
Pakistan put his name forward for "his attempts to de-escalate the 2025 India-Pakistan conflict, seeking a resolution through dialogue and backchannel diplomacy, while emphasizing the principles of restraint, regional stability, and the prevention of armed escalation, despite India's stated refusal of third-party mediation and its insistence on bilateral engagement".
Meanwhile, Israel nominated the US president "in recognition of his pursuit of peace and security in the Middle East and Trump’s role in brokering the Abraham Accords and the ceasefire and hostage releases in Gaza".
Trump himself has even suggested his deserving nature of the award, claiming to have ended at least seven wars during his premiership.
At the end of August Trump said: "I've done six wars, I've ended six wars.
"If you look at the six deals I settled this year, they were all at war. I didn't do any ceasefires."
The following day, in an interview with Fox News, he revised the number to seven wars.
However, ultimately Trump's peace-prize dream was was not to be.
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